4.4 Article

Monitoring food digestion with magnetic resonance techniques

Journal

PROCEEDINGS OF THE NUTRITION SOCIETY
Volume 80, Issue 2, Pages 148-158

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0029665120007867

Keywords

Digestion; Gastric emptying; MRI; Protein

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Magnetic resonance techniques, including NMR and MRI, play a significant role in digestion research by studying in vivo and in vitro gastro-intestinal processes. These techniques have the potential to provide molecular-level and quantitative information, but careful validation is necessary to understand their significance in specific digestion contexts.
This review outlines the current use of magnetic resonance (MR) techniques to study digestion and highlights their potential for providing markers of digestive processes such as texture changes and nutrient breakdown. In vivo digestion research can be challenging due to practical constraints and biological complexity. Therefore, digestion is primarily studied using in vitro models. These would benefit from further in vivo validation. NMR is widely used to characterise food systems. MRI is a related technique that can be used to study both in vitro model systems and in vivo gastro-intestinal processes. MRI allows visualisation and quantification of gastric processes such as gastric emptying and coagulation. Both MRI and NMR scan sequences can be configured to be sensitive to different aspects of gastric or intestinal contents. For example, magnetisation transfer and chemical exchange saturation transfer can detect proton (H-1) exchange between water and proteins. MRI techniques have the potential to provide molecular-level and quantitative information on in vivo gastric (protein) digestion. This requires careful validation in order to understand what these MR markers of digestion mean in a specific digestion context. Combined with other measures they can be used to validate and inform in vitro digestion models. This may bridge the gap between in vitro and in vivo digestion research and can aid the optimisation of food properties for different applications in health and disease.

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